PAGE rout! THE GUARDIAN Aulborlud as Second CIIII llhll Post Office N Department. 0ttIwI. I Tho Island Guudlnn Publishing Co. Editor and Maulglng Director. In A. Burnett. Auoclnlo Editor. Funk Wclkor. CIRCULATION "C0VOIIIPl'l.lIl5O Edwud Inlund llln the dew” "Ibo Ilrongut memory is weaker than tho weaken ink". CKABLOTTETOWN MONDAY, NOV. 9, 1958 Symbols 0f Sacrifice The following incident, recalled some years ago by General Crerar, Canada's World War 'Two commander, is of very timely significance today: "On September 8, 1944, I motored up that old road, so familiar to those of us who served in the First Great War-the road from St. Omer through Cassel, Pop- eringhe and Vlamertinghe to Ypres. The forward formations of the First Canadian Army were then pressing on to the bord- ers of Holland and to the geographical bar- rier of the broad mouth of the River Scheldt. The day before, the 1st Polish Armoured had reached, and cleared the enemy from Ypres. "That day. my own Tactical Headquart- ers was on the move forward, to be set up in the bomb-scarred fields near St. Omer. I was free, therefore, for a few hours, to push on alone, except for my A.D.C., and while motoring to Ypres, to connect the memories of the last war with the experi- ences of the war we were then fighting. '-Thoughts of 1915, 1916 and 1917, of the Battles of St. Julian, Sanctuary Wood and Passchcndaele, passed through my mind, of the Canadians who fought there, and of their sons, who were fighting now. This was Flanders again, with its battlefields and the dead and wounded which marked them. And its crimson Poppies, which had become the symbol of their human sacri- lice." Each year as the aiiiiivcrsni'y approache.-',, poppies are sold to be worn in .momory of the lallen. and tnrr.iii-sis of time Canadian Legion auxiliar- io" jriin in raising funds in this manner to aid vc'.crans and vctcrans' families. This is one i'?)' in which we can all participate in Remembrance Day , ii") i'it1::vl of rvmcinl)i'aiicc, and it is to be wr--.i limit on this occasion the custom will 7- r .ic widely followed than evei before. "Lacs-llanada Highway I .li'cll urrr one-half of the Tl":-1.18-Calladtl lllffi-li:Vil,V' has been completed across the prairies: But taking the country as a whole only about one-qtiarlcr of the 4,580 mile stretch of first class high-speed bighwav has been completed. I v When it is finally finished it will in- clude 94 bridges and will enable tourists to travel from Newfoundland to British Columbia on a uniform bard-surface road- way varying in width from 32 feet to 44 feet. depending upon the stretch of coun- try it passes through. The thousands of miles of bituminous and concrete highway will be devoid of sharp curves and so de- signed that motorists will be able to travel at speeds of 50 miles an hour in compar- ative safety. It is the largest ccinstruction project that the Federal and Provincial Governments have ever undertaken joint- ly. It is the biggest east-west construc- tion job since the building of the Canadian Pacific Railway. One half the cost of the highway, originally estimated at .iS300,000,000, is be- ing paid by the Federal Government and one-half by the provinces. However it is now clear that the project, before it is com- pleted, will cost considerably more than the original estimate made in 1948, because the costs of labor and materials have been ris- ing steadily in the last five years. The number of miles of work approved and completed including paving from the date of signing of the agreement to Aug. 31, 1953 is as follows, by provinces: Ilqulvnlont Mllcc Mileage P'0"'"'5 Approved Completed Newfoundland ......- . . , , , . , . , , , , , H N. B. ........... ..- 45.6 45.6 Nova Scotia ......,,....,.,. . , . , , , , , , , ,, P. E. I. .. 31.2 31.2 Ontario 278.9 231.4 . Manitoba .............. 102.0 80.0 Saskatchewan 178.7 128.7 Alberta ............. ..- ..... .. 124.1 103.5 Banff & Yoho Parks .. 9.9 2.7 B. C. .. .. 127.5 96.5 Totals .... .... .. 897.9 719.6 Commitments approved for construction of the highway now exceed 512-1,000,000. It is estimated that payments for work done during the 1953 fiscal year will prob- exci.-ed 550,000,000, maldng thisthe Innunl program since work on the lilgbmy was started. Quebec has not f - in the agreement with the Federal (ant. It is the only province not .IIl'IOIlGI'lt. Nova. Scotic signed The total miles of the proposed Trans- Canada route by provinces are, Newfound- land, 610; Prince Edward Island, 74; Nova Scotia, 310; New Brunswick, 388; Ontario, 1,412; Manitoba, 303; Saskatchewan, 414; Alberta, 292, and British Columbia, 692. The mileage in the national parks amounts to 83 miles. Construction of the highway through the national parks is paid entirely by the Federal Government. ' civic Taxpayer k A'n attempt is being made to reform the Scottish rating system as a result of the financial embarrassments of Local Author- ities. They are in deep waters, reports The Scotsman, because their expenditure is ris- ing faster than their incomes, owing to reasons beyond their control.' The story sounds all too familiar and it is not sur- prising that there bave been proposals to abolish local rates altogether and make the services provided by the Local Auth- orities a charge on the national Exchequer. That proposal is not taken very serious- ly, nor is the proposal to substitute a local income tax for the existing rates, the ob- jection being the uncertainty of the amount of revenue from the latter source. An interesting point, however, is the pro- posal to abolish owner's rates. The point is that the owner derives no direct advan- tage from the services for which the ten- ant pays rates. As far as be is (:0ncerned, the rates are a form of property tax. Again, private building of houses to let, although common in England, is discour- aged in Scotland by the owner's rates. This, in the main, is the situation in this country. In fact owner's rates or more biuntly, the property tax is the chief source of revenue for the municipalities and it is of no consequence that the owner may not be the least interested in the ser- vices provided by the Vmunicipallfy. The water he drinks, the streets he traverses, Scotsman admits that the consequences of relieving owners of their share could hard- say if that amount were added to the al- ready high payments they have to make? One has only to ask that question to real- izc that this would not be practical poli- ties. The most that could be done with the owner's rates would probably be to freeze them. EDITORIAL NOTES With the approach of Armistice Day the matter of observance of the two minutes silence could well be brought to the at- tention of children by parents and teachers. too.late. O 1 0 Fish markets are traditionally the place for lurid language and in Newfoundland the tradition seems to. be maintained even in marketing on a Provincial scale, with Premier Smallwood giving as good as he gets. 0 O I Our local artists again come into their own with the opening of the annual ex- hibition at the Harris Memorial Gallery. Outstanding travelling art exhibitions are a valuable part of the Gallery's service to the public but the opportunity of showing local work probably does more to sustain pub- lic interest. O O 0 Of the making of laws there is no end. A recent one is that of Windsor, Ontario, which has made it illegal to leave an un- attended ice box tor similar container where it could endanger the lives of chil- dren. Long after the ice-box deaths of two Windsor children have been forgotten theiowners and handlers of boxes of all kinds will be in danger of fine or impris- onment. , ' O Q 0 It may seem odd that the Russians should have celebrated'the "October Rev- olution" on November 7th" but they were correct in doing so. The event occurred in October, 1917, by the Julian calendar then in use in Russia. Thirteen days were dropped in 1918 and the Gregorian calen- dar adopted. The Soviet Union recently took part in a meeting of the International Council for Standardization which called for study of proposals for further calendar reform. . Sir Giles Gilbert. Scott, English archi- tect, was born this date 1880. He built. many churches and schools and designed new buildings for a number of very an- cient ones, including the librarles at both Oxford and Cambridge. He also ' designed the Waterloo Bridge. He designed the new House of Commons, making use of stone from Clipsam; shaped by masons at Cam- bridge and Peterborough as well as in Lon- don. Pnnelling is in lined oak. The,table is AoiUionlynawpimmihg'iu route; ofockfrom this country. , , ly be faced. What would Scottish tenants- It is one case where the eleventh hour is. Rendezvous -. ; ROADSIDE DELIGHT Perhaps a lad, one late September the school his children attend may be pro- S thnoo'n. H” h d b d vided by quite another authority. As far 3 ei:docf,aeeSe'5 umema '3 r" as he is concerned it is a property tax pure saw squimls hiding nuts in hol- . low trees- and 51'T1pl9' And hoped that winter would not Despite the anomaly, however, The come too soon. This highway was I slow and crooked trail: The lad was helping clear a patch of land: He let. the near ox hand For salty morsels from his dinner- nuzzle in his pail: Then, finishing his apple, crisp and sound. swung back nn arm and flung away the core- Wntched it are high and light in brushy ground! Could he have guessed the friendly forest floor Would nurture ll, until it grew to be All boysl delight, . . . a roadside apple-tree? -Ruth E. Sbarfe. in Canadian Poetry Magazine. Issac-I . . ; Old Charlottetown ' (And r. 1;. I.) )EAllLY TRAIN ARRANGEMENTS From a letter to the Hon. Lemuel C. Owen, President of the Execu- tive Council, from Thomas Swin- yard, P. E. Island Railway con- tractor, Doc. 14, 1874: "I have been considering what train accommodatloii it would be possible and safe to give the pub- lic during the winter months, and until the line can be fully open- ed in the spring; by which time it. may be expected that dwellings for st.c.tlon-masters and sheds for freight at Sum.i-nerside, Charlotte- town, Georgetown and Souris can be provided, and workshops and machinery at Charlottetown pre- pared. "Of course. until these neces- saries for the proper and effici- ent working of t.he' Railway are all complete, the arrangements that may be made can only be of special character. All freight. must. be carried at owners” risk, and, 88 Wetraiidis passengers. it. is self- evident that it would be very dan- gerous to carry them, except at fixed and seasonsblc hours. My opinion is, that the trci-ha which may be run should Ill travel in daylight, as fair as possible, 1);. cause, there being no staitlon-mas. tern. and no lights to guide th- imln hunk, there would be great difficulty in imaging the 1...... to I stand in the dark at the pro- per Placed; and pasengci-I might. B-llilht on bridges or in cattle- Buards. or walk upon or into the some or other duigeroug ping, "In the mbcence, too, or com. plate tales:-mph Iocouuno'do.t.ion, it would only be prudgnf, to mow 0” "1111 upon the some division It I time, except in Ipeoinl cum 0', Ematoncy, such, as one twin Medina the help of uiothci-. In the woloud rouch time-tcble, you will no inst I have taken all those lreocutioiu into coinciden- t-Ion. Ind. while the mic does not Pretend to give the accommo- dotlon which the Gwcrninent will be able to I.ffonl when the l7.I.li- wuy ll fully perfected, it will, I trust. give all that can room. mm. undue; the cir- . ht recent; winter 9 "There will, u it is now drawn, be lahlol trains Oloh W botwggn Charlottetown Ind Eu do; two tmlnc such way pt week be. tween Cllltkliletoink Aiborion. Ind 'I1gnlIli; two trciiil each wuv per week between ObI.rlot.0clmvn. 9 Qatari Ind Souls, and two t such VG! PG! week between cbuioltuown, OIrdigIn and Georgetown The In-Ingunonu will, of course, "be Iubiect to It is an interesting thing that a book on education in Canada should bear the title "So Little For The Mind". The book is written by Dr. Hilda Neatby of the University of Saskatchewan and is publish- ed by Clarke, Irwin and Company. It says what many people have wanted to say themselves, and it says it very well. What. Dr. Neatby desires is an education that would get back again to learning something of greatness, and which would not shrink from discipline, or the recognition of dullness nnd bright- ness, or from hard work. She does not believe that such an education would be the grim. crushing system that the "pro- gressives" would claim it to be. She sees it as salvation l'or.edu- cation itself. Otherwise education will continue to become more and more preoccupied with dry the- ories and dubious techniques, and end by turning out starved minds. The trouble with progressive education is that it has hecomc the victim of its own jargon More time is spent. on "trnining' teachers than in giving them depth of scholarship in the sub- jects they are supposed to teach. O 0 O Educators are overwhelmed with studying and discussing model kitchens, green blackboards, elec- lric doors and inter-communlcir tion systems. They are greatly concerned with counsellors, cus- todinns, superintendents, supervis- ors and audio-visual experts. Teaching techniques are so out of liand as to obscure what is to be taught. So it is that when I "scholar" appears in a training school he is likely to cause as much embar- rassment. as the emergence of a bright child in I schoolroom. The bright child, in the pro- gressive movcment, may be dis- posed of by warnings that he must be kept in his age group. socially adjusted, emotionally ma- tured. and held bnck from "over- reaching." so with the scholar among the teachers. His enthusiasm for the subjects he teaches and for learn- ing about them must be temper- ed with a due consideration for charts and tables, and the ac- quisition of the professional jar- gon of "methodology." But in u rapt absorption in the accompani- ments of education (necessary as they are) the great things that nourish education itself may wilt. and wither. I C The danger throughout. as Dr. Neatby rightly says, has been the obsession with "socializing" the individual, Ind so "adjusting him to his environment" that be is, in effect, dragged down to medl- ocrity. AI Dr. Neatby puts it: "The danger of expressing demo- cratic equality in termii of a dull level of mediocrity, the fatuous worship of the common man not because he is A man but because he is common. iii too familiar to need emphasizing." When it: be- comu the ideal of education. edu- cation (of all things) can become both iintl-intellectual 'and anti- cultural. Undoubtedly the "progressive" education is motivated by I vaguely tender humanitarian feel- ing. The aim is to make the child II comfortable II possible. Hence the preoccupation with buildings and Ill the pIrppher- null: of education. But the process iii carried so for that the child in even spIred the extreme: needed to ll.-Irn Ic- curatcly or deeply, More than this, discipline is to eased that he never really learn: the ex- ertion: of living. I Whnt II the result? Hero is Dr. NeIlby'I picture: "The bond 'grIduIteI' of elementary Ind high schools often seem. in progreulve language, to be 'lncompielely I0- cicllzerl'. Ignorant even of the thing: that they might be expect- ed to know. thpy do not can to lurn. They lack an obiect in life, they Ire unnwnrc of the Joy of Ichlevemenl. They luvs bun chcnce. fur clrcumouncas Ind da- porionoc may under necessary." is a goal, rather than I by-pro- duct. . . . They can write, Ind Starved By Education (The Gazette, Montreal) often type, but too cannot construct ll sentence. . . Yet these graduates are not stupid, or ill-lntentioned, or in- curably indifferent to what they have never learned to call their duty. They are the victims of ii system that has tenderly exalted mediocrity as the most humane standard that modern life should exact. Some may say that Dr. Neatby overstates her case. Certainly she will be vigorously answered. Yet her case gains in lmpressiveneiis because it is not isolated. Her often they grammatical from the defects of our present world. The ills of modern education are precisely the ills of modern society. Our educators are the slaves of our social defects. The retreat from discipline and work is not an inexplicable phenom- enon of the schools. It is all about us. The real danger is that the schools, instead of preserving I better estimate of life's needs, may be actively engaged in in- creasing the social weaknesses that they unfortunately reflect. Stud Farm Of - The World (BBC WeeklyTT;llfs Summary) ”Toduy it is a simple statistical fact that British breeds of cattle, sheep and pigs are found in most. countries of the world”. said Rich- ard 1-lilliar, Editor of the monthly magazine called "The Milk In- dustry", broadcasting in the 1330': External Service. That. Britain has earned and kept. the title of "Stud Farm of the World" is evi- dence of the quality of British livestock which, almost. without ex- ceptlon, carries its high standards, wherever It goes. The bigh-yleld- lng milk cows maintain thclroutput. figures and produce calves which carry on strain and the pigs and sheep im- prove the breeds to which they are introduced. "No one", said I-illllar, "denies the obvious truth that Bri- tain produces cows and sheep and pigs that have first-clcn breed characteristics I: well an immense stamina, adaptability Ind disease- reslstlng potential, all indispens- able qualities in livestock bought by farmers who. are very much concerned wtli the bard economics of farming and who are certainly not in the market; for nnlmIlI with more pedigree than produc- tive power." familiar throughout the world. The black and while Prleslun cow is rapidly becoming known Is the 1,000-gallon ylelder. "At one time the yield of this breed wu Io mu- Ilve Ind so consistent t.hIt it. was looked on as something of I freak," commented Hillier but, it competes very well withclliticontemporu-lea . on butter-lat content. And lelecvcs them I long way behind on (input- ity." The powerful, coIl-blcck Aberdeen Angus was one of the finest beef producing Ilralnu in existence. The cattle thrived in the want extreme: of cllmntc Ind in bud living tax-rIln without their cIpIclty for producing top-It.Ind- Ii-d mast uid high-quIllty -off- spring being in the tent. imputed and much the nine could be laid of I-Icrefordl. the gi-eI0 brown Inl- mlll with while flccl. One of the twist interacting devclopinontc in British cattle breeding conccmed the Bad Poll. In Inlmnl bred acltnttficcliy II I dual-burpou type, giving I high yield of good- quclity milk II well n b b-m.nd- Ird nine. Today the Poll was almost Ia widely known In none of tul. ncognllld dnlry or beef types, I trlbim to British Imedoi-I who hcvc do it tho cattle to such I stand that they nuaautuiiy compete vriui mp; out-polo broods on vary ca: . lclhin Ibo bu-to mall Inlnol CI in Illowed to Inuine thnt bcpplncu pig 7; Notes B); NOVEMBER 9, 1953 mi. The w..,,. According to Ilcllnllcc the Ivor- Hso person takes nearly 20,000 steps a day. And still we're told thin generation doesn't: know where it's going.-Hamilton spectator. . A 18183 coiupIny bu produced popcorn that cute: like bnmnu. The young try will now find nothing quite so dull as a banana that tastes like a banana. -Hamilton Spectator. PI-ovlnclol bcsllh Iulliorlllcu Ire mnking another appenl for nurses to help care for the 200 polio cine: now being treated in King General Hospital. The radio appeal by Health Minister F. C. Bell two weeks ago brought little result. This time authorities are making a direct appeal by personal letter to all the known inactive nurses in Manitoba.-Winnipeg Tribune. The rclntlonship of the element: of Ill living things is interesting. Air, for example. About one-fifth of this delicate mixture of the lightest: things on earth at the earthts surface in oxygen that cus- tain: all animal life. Nitrogen, most of the rest, furnishes plant; nour- ishment and dilutes the oxygen to the proper proportion for man's needs. Three parts in 10,000 are carbon dioxide. Without this ele- ment. all life would perlsh.-Wind- New in-the Id: In . house "with six. h.n.:-'- '-;'-;','f: ,':,f"' care of anyone who doesn't III as time for I whole bath, but 1,, T um half a. bath is better em... 5,; bath at. Ill.-Ottlwb Citizen. No one looking at an grltish Guiana, says ourmfrlimod U310. would ever think the coun- W W” M3 95011821 for the Gov. eminent. to move very in to me left.-Hamilton epochs, . Who Inn New York on, no heart? That. pernicious r .0.- ahould be laid to refit by the 're, cent report of John -S. Sinclair chairman of the New York Chums; of the Red Cross, in which it, 1 revealed that New Yorkers gay; 335.000 pints of blood to our arm- ed forces during the Korean war &ie,oao,ooo in gnu to the 2...; Cross, and lint year alone con- tributed 332,592 hours of voluntu work This is a. splendid record -New York Times: Five young men f o E arid two from II':lEl:d n;.i::.11 roux Flori William lut: week on their War to Calgary. Aged be. tween 21 and 23 years, they have signed three-year contracts with it chartered bank of Canada, and gm. looking forward to work as junior: in Alberta branches of the bank, sor Daily Star. mothering. hardiness and Tamworth, the appeal to most; farmerc - "high meat yield, prolific breeding. good very high food conversion rate. The reddish-coloured pig, also stands high in the opin- ion of farmers." British pigs fell spirited attack gains its force be- much as 8. thousand gulneu in the cause she does not separate the open market for defects of our educational system sheep were magnificent, the highly productive - Many breeds of British cIt.tlc are I into three main categories-bacon types, pork types and dual-purpose breeds suitable for both. One of the last, the Large Black, was the favourite British pig overseas for it thrived out of doors on relatively poor land, cro ed well with most other breeds give good litters of healthy young, settled down easily in changed conditions and gave a satisfactory economic re- turn. In sheep Britain possessed some thirty different breeds which could be divided into three groups, the Longwool. Mountain and Down. Most British sheep were sent all over the world and were characterised by their consistent ability to forage on almost: waste land where only the poorest vegetation seemed able to survive; they showed remarkable disease- reslstlng powers and I sturdiness. The Romney Marsh sheep were everywhere and a good ram of this breed could fetch in Romney Much prolific and relatively immune to disease. "British breeders and farmers," ncluded Hiillnx, "continue to pay as much attention to breeding pol- icy and technique as they do to ordinary farm production. Ec- sciirch and experiment go on with- out. pause: and the result 1: live- stock that can go anywhere in the in the Lord: hear thereof and be glad. 0 mIg- nlfy the Lord with me, Ind lot Ill cull: his name together. . . Xrhe Lord redecmcth the Ioul of his servants: Ind none of them that hunt in him shall be dcIolIto. The reason they have been engag. ed by the bank may be tracgd to the unwillingness of I large num. ber of Canadian youths to take a clerical job of that kind which does not pay quite as much as jobs in industrial plants,-in the 0,1 fields, at. mines. Bur, mm, m,,,, been-schooled Ilso to recognize that 10 or 15 year: from this point they will be earning more than the lads who are thinking only of the present, and will be on their way to even gregte; ,9. turn: for their training and er. fort.-Fort William Times-Journal. My Ioul Ilu.ll make her bout. the humble shall nvwoons CHANDLER BROS. BELMONT ST. DIAL 6557-8 world -not only as quality-bred but. its quality breeders." PROFESSIONAL CARDS MucPhoI 8: Trainer 8. E. IIIEPIIEE. B.A., ,Q.C. E. SODIEBLED TBAIN03. ILA Gcudot E8: l-luszurd GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A., LLB Bu-rlntcx-I Ind Eollclbors U Burlcter Ind solicitor Bank of commerce Building Chu-lotutown Money to Locn "thus. R. Mcouuid B.A. BABRIBTEB. BOLICITOII. NOT . to. Euurn Trust Building GHABIDTPETOWN H. J.' Maison. R.O. Optomctrlic Montuuc. P. B; I. - Phone an Palmer & Haslam A. J. IIABLAII. BA. LLB. l!IrrlIlcr. Eco. Bunk ot Nova sooth (lbunbcro Allison M. Glllll. I.L.I. IABIIREK. !0l.lOl'l'0l& me. no llclunond SI. - buulomtown IM Prlnco St. - lburrlctcrl. me. nun, go Lu, J S Taylor RT6. CInIdlIn Bank of Commerce Bldg. ,g 0 I I m---r-t-i-m--j-' o,.,o,,.,mm Dr. W. R. Carson E 1-: min a, Glulec rmoa C'n30"50T03 (,:::nernl(cnce Ind Queen su. C:X: "63N Office Phone 9133,-House 4156 om Mn 201 "mu at M. Albuii Farmer. o.c. Mailman. P-eke 8- M u-n . Nicholson A. ll. PEAKE. ILA. I.L.ll. JOHN P. NICHOLSON. LL Bun-llbcn. Eh. Colloctlom - Money To mm 115 Grnflon Street A. Wulthcn Gander. l.L.I. IIABIIBTEB. BOIIJOITOB. 5”- nl Gnnon Street Money to noon C0U00”"" Gordon E. MucMillan. BIA" LLc'n -BABBISTEB. BOLIOITOB. Etc. Clilrlottatowl DIAL I228 'jTT Frederic A. Large. 9-C- Blrthhl. Bollcltor, Natl?! loyal Bunk of 0InIdI llllldlnl Charlottetown. P. E. I. noun on City Ind FIHII ..B.......B...:-....- Proportion Iyfbll J. Gflllf. 0.0. D... K. A. I"-giaghgfp OITOMITIIIT DENTIST In Kent street Phone In Dental X-rs! toppoclto Bonn llokl) Above Charlottetown Clinic :0: mm. st. BM '4” J. A. Hcmilgcin sazusrun. Iouorrol. M6 PIIOIO H0. NOTAIY. EMS. '"'TTT"TTT'T'TT-' cunts Min Dr. A. l.. Mnclsocc "' ' & mn MGHIIOSOII omlk om!-Vmo 7933'” m 11! Gallon It Phone III p .i g -Eu" Q3 Jo AI Root Igenr” 10 M III last about "Phone sin in llrobncud Ilrod (um no IliIpIIn'I Ac-non oimmmawu. I-I-L McDONAI..D. CIIRRE It .30.. ' accumu- - . can-nun Inn ", ' !lou::linQ:oboc. on-m. romeo. Baht con. Iiminooin. V-new whimhu 's..?."u.m.... in fii-It clan pig with qiplillu top that c-bu. Iiu. nmmm ”'gn"”' , H. R.:DOANI I COMPANY ,. i tummdwm I 241 "9"4""'."”" W.-IAIIIIIN (1.AL"o.m'c.lI-' Icutvlllo. umpooi. New cu-gov. mm Ku'oorng'3E-,.